If you’re going into the election with a Never Hillary hashtag, I understand. I followed the Clinton White House scandals of the '90s as a high school student who paid way too much attention to politics. When Bill Clinton ran for president, I planted a Bush Quayle sign in our front yard, even though we lived in a liberal-leaning college town. It didn’t bode well for the GOP that one morning we woke up to find the Bush sign burnt to a crisp.

I moved to Washington as a college freshman and took an internship working in the federal government, which made me feel a little like Mr. Smith Goes to Washington. Then the Lewinsky scandal broke, and I wondered how the Clinton presidency could tarnish everything in its wake. Suddenly, working in government as a college intern seemed tawdry instead of idealistic.

So if you’re frustrated with scandals of the past or scandals of the present, I get it. And yet, I’m With Her now (even though that slogan deserves an eye roll).

Hillary is the best choice for President. If you want to examine the reasons why, others have made the case.

The bigger task at hand is to think about remaking the GOP. Republican leaders shouldn't jump on the bandwagon to endorse the party’s nominee. They should re-imagine what it means to be a Republican. There’s a wave of discontent rising among Americans, rooted in a lack of economic opportunity. In times like these, sometimes we point fingers and assign blame.

What if we did something different? After all, this is the party of Lincoln.

What would he say about this election?

While running for Senate more than 150 years ago, Lincoln took a stand against slavery.

He didn’t win the Senate seat. He lost that battle, but he won the war and changed hearts and minds.